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Mar 18, 2013
03/13
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steve crutchfield, euronext, joins me now. steve, you know, let's talk about you only picked five names. you're offering these mini options. obviously, you're looking to get more trading volume in. how's the reception been so far today? >> the reception has been great, cheryl, and you're right, we focused on five of the most actively-traded names that are interesting particularly to retail investors who may have some of these names in their portfolio; apple, google, amazon, and the s&p 500 and gold etfs. cheryl: you're trading on both options exchanges. >> reception so far has been great, a very solid start. last time i checked about 30 minutes ago it looked industry wide about 14,000 of these options had traded, more than half about 8,000 on our two markets, so a very nice start to the product, and really great opportunities for those retail investors as you were talking about to be able to make use of options against some of those higher-price stock prices to reduce risk. cheryl: and options have become incredibly popular, b
steve crutchfield, euronext, joins me now. steve, you know, let's talk about you only picked five names. you're offering these mini options. obviously, you're looking to get more trading volume in. how's the reception been so far today? >> the reception has been great, cheryl, and you're right, we focused on five of the most actively-traded names that are interesting particularly to retail investors who may have some of these names in their portfolio; apple, google, amazon, and the...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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steve, the directer of the narc institute for early education research at rutgers was consulted by the white house. there's a number, estimated, one the president's plan, that early childhood education could cost up to $10 billion a year, rick. this goes in the line of more spending, more recovery. this is a lot of money. >> well, yeah, but here's the concern. i don't know how you can make the argument that 800,000 civilian defense workers losing their jobs can be good for the economy. i don't quite see how that's possible, and now on spending on preschool, look, what we're looking at now, forget the president's agenda to increase it. we're now looking at a major cut to head start because of the sequester. i don't know if that impacts on the economy today, but you can't tell me this is a good thing for the future when we take away the programs for kids. >> bottom line is, literally, barack obama needs more revenue. he needs another source. he just raised taxes on the risk, talking about closing deductions which is not enough. i'd like to predict they will eventually put another tax mec
steve, the directer of the narc institute for early education research at rutgers was consulted by the white house. there's a number, estimated, one the president's plan, that early childhood education could cost up to $10 billion a year, rick. this goes in the line of more spending, more recovery. this is a lot of money. >> well, yeah, but here's the concern. i don't know how you can make the argument that 800,000 civilian defense workers losing their jobs can be good for the economy. i...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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steve, thanks for coming by. appreciate it. steve englander from citigroup. there's a lot of speculation. if you are a billionaire in europe and had a lot of money parked in cyprus and maybe cyprus or the euro zone not a smart place to park extra money. maybe that money would come here to the united states or be put in u.s. equities. >> channel, come on, work with me. >> channel? i mean, logically that makes a lot of sense, right? somehow it would find its way in the united states or u.s. equities of some form. i'm not convinced that's exactly what's going to happen. but we'll see. i think to his point, if cyprus is a template for the rest of europe, then that's a little scary. i understand that cyprus is not a big deal. someone mentioned this morning a cyprus is created every month or so in china. so i understand the size of cyprus is not a big deal, but maybe this is a template or this is sort of a precursor to things that makes it rather interesting, i think. >> still to come on "fast," much more on cyprus including how russian dollars could turn the pain
steve, thanks for coming by. appreciate it. steve englander from citigroup. there's a lot of speculation. if you are a billionaire in europe and had a lot of money parked in cyprus and maybe cyprus or the euro zone not a smart place to park extra money. maybe that money would come here to the united states or be put in u.s. equities. >> channel, come on, work with me. >> channel? i mean, logically that makes a lot of sense, right? somehow it would find its way in the united states...
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Mar 26, 2013
03/13
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steve, i have to ask you the rove question off the bat. can you imagine the next republican presidential candidate being in favor of marriage equality? >> i think that the next republican candidate could be in favor of marriage equality with there being no consequence in the road to the nomination and no political consequence for senators like rob portman who come out in favor of it, but i doubt we will see it in the next election. >> steve, i've got to tell you, i think karen finney and i are both wondering please explain to us, steve, how that candidate would get through the iowa caucuses as a first stop? >> well, look, rick santorum won the iowa caucuses. he wasn't the nominee. pat robertson won iowa caucus, he wasn't the nominee. iowa doesn't pick the republican nominee any more than it does in the democratic party, but the republican party in 2016, 2020, cannot be held hostage to the social extremism that some in our party have on all these issues because the country is changing and voters in the middle won't tolerate it. >> karen fin
steve, i have to ask you the rove question off the bat. can you imagine the next republican presidential candidate being in favor of marriage equality? >> i think that the next republican candidate could be in favor of marriage equality with there being no consequence in the road to the nomination and no political consequence for senators like rob portman who come out in favor of it, but i doubt we will see it in the next election. >> steve, i've got to tell you, i think karen...
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Mar 26, 2013
03/13
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cooper got away with it, but remember steve irwin and the stingray, do not mess around with mother nature. that's it for us. check out the factor website which is different. and spout off anywhere in the world. oreilly@foxnews.com, name and town. if you wish to opine. when writing to us, no pala vchvpalaver that's a sat word. and i'm sorry for the frog must have having a good time. and the spin stops here and we're definitely looking out for you. >> . >> welcome to "hannity" tonight. now that president obama has returned to the tour, limiting your second amendment rights. in a minute i'll be joined by the always outspoken ann coulter and learned that prime minister is hitting the road to tout his anti-gun agenda and this is what he said. >> as a nation, the last three months have changed us. they forced us to answer difficult questions about what we can do, what we must do to prevent the kind of mass considers we've seen in newtown, in aurora, and oak creek, as well as the every day tragedies that happen too often in big cities and small towns across america. today there's genuine disagre
cooper got away with it, but remember steve irwin and the stingray, do not mess around with mother nature. that's it for us. check out the factor website which is different. and spout off anywhere in the world. oreilly@foxnews.com, name and town. if you wish to opine. when writing to us, no pala vchvpalaver that's a sat word. and i'm sorry for the frog must have having a good time. and the spin stops here and we're definitely looking out for you. >> . >> welcome to...
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Mar 26, 2013
03/13
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steve liesman is back. steve, what can you tell us about this time? >> becky, this is only interesting when stuff changes. stuff changed when it came to americans's attitudes on the sequester. our poll found it very interesting change here. let's look where they were back in november around the election about how to cut the deficit. 3% said do it with tax hikes only. 16% in spending cuts only. very little support for tax hikes only. 12 points up. 55% want a combination. but 12-point drop. what's interesting is it was entirely driven by changes in republicans's attitudes almost entirely. 28% republicans back in march. now it's more like 50% if you look at the current results. a slight change of 6% to 13%. but republicans less inclined in part because there were in fact, tax hikes. 15% unsure. 27% say they expected to have no impact. 40% say it will hurt the economy. do i combine them? just come over here for a second. i get 45%. the question is whether or not president obama is making his case about the danger of sequester. i want to point out zoom in
steve liesman is back. steve, what can you tell us about this time? >> becky, this is only interesting when stuff changes. stuff changed when it came to americans's attitudes on the sequester. our poll found it very interesting change here. let's look where they were back in november around the election about how to cut the deficit. 3% said do it with tax hikes only. 16% in spending cuts only. very little support for tax hikes only. 12 points up. 55% want a combination. but 12-point drop....
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Mar 18, 2013
03/13
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post steve jobs there is concern. it is a small entrepreneurial company that focuses on pnc insurance base. that is 30-year-old software. guidewire is right there. this is a business with less than $200 million in recurring revenues. their win rates are very, very high. well over 50%. so we see the pathway to at least a billion dollars of recurring revenue to be very achievable. >> and also gartner. >> information technology is increasingly strategic for all organizations. the pace of change is accelerating. you probably hair things of cloud computing and mobile and social and big data. and gartner is helping their customers deal with those changes. it sells under $30,000. it has a budget of at least a million dollars. what we really like is they are very much in the early stage of their opportunities. they have a little bit less than 9,000 customers a day. over 100,000 of 10 million or more. >> would you play google in outline of this? you're not doing some other big tech names but that seems like a name that keeps g
post steve jobs there is concern. it is a small entrepreneurial company that focuses on pnc insurance base. that is 30-year-old software. guidewire is right there. this is a business with less than $200 million in recurring revenues. their win rates are very, very high. well over 50%. so we see the pathway to at least a billion dollars of recurring revenue to be very achievable. >> and also gartner. >> information technology is increasingly strategic for all organizations. the pace...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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it makes in a bill gates, you know, transition to steve palmer. it makes sense. worked very well at ford. you name the worst performing companies. by the way, the barron's list of the world's most valuable ceos they didn't separate the roles. look at the problems in the uk where they love to advertise they haven't. did it help with bp, royal dutch shell. as you go down that list you think of the disasters. rbs, barclay's all had separation of rolls. it creates confusion in the aftermath as to who speaks for the company, how they're resolving it. and zero research that it's preventive or corresponds with shareholder wealth. >> it's a longer conversation to have. >> rex tillerson. hp. >> yep. >> it's a fantastic job. >> jeff, we got the music playing us out. we will have you back and continue this conversation another time. thanks. >> jeff is always colorful. when we come back, a last minute deal. in europe they are certainly bid up. the cac is up by over 1.6%. [ lorenzo ] i'm lorenzo. i work for 47 different companies. well, technically i work for one. that compan
it makes in a bill gates, you know, transition to steve palmer. it makes sense. worked very well at ford. you name the worst performing companies. by the way, the barron's list of the world's most valuable ceos they didn't separate the roles. look at the problems in the uk where they love to advertise they haven't. did it help with bp, royal dutch shell. as you go down that list you think of the disasters. rbs, barclay's all had separation of rolls. it creates confusion in the aftermath as to...
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Mar 26, 2013
03/13
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steve liesman will lay it all out for us. plus, forget s&p 1565. 1760 is the next stop so 12%, 13% from where we are here now and it could happen, they say, faster than you think. we're back in two. >>> let's get to steve liesman who has the results of the all-america survey. i know you're talking about gold bugs this morning. >> we asked a question a year ago and we recycled it for the economic survey and we asked 800 americans, and we asked them quite simply what is the best investment? back in march 2012 and now a year later, let's see what they say. i'll tell you what the answer is not. it's not corporate bonds, it's not bonds and savings accounts. that's like less than 10 for any of them. how about stocks? that went up a little bit, 21%. real estate went up 27% and gold, still the number one choice of americans when asked to choose among these investments. down a little bit, up a little bit in real estate, up a little bit in stocks, but gold is still a pretty good winner statistically. let's move on and take a look at wh
steve liesman will lay it all out for us. plus, forget s&p 1565. 1760 is the next stop so 12%, 13% from where we are here now and it could happen, they say, faster than you think. we're back in two. >>> let's get to steve liesman who has the results of the all-america survey. i know you're talking about gold bugs this morning. >> we asked a question a year ago and we recycled it for the economic survey and we asked 800 americans, and we asked them quite simply what is the...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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he caught matthew martoma which may lead to steve cohen, sac former fund manager trading on alleged insider information on elon. expert period of time network guy giving him the information. he was looking at the capital whole another time before the financial crisis because he thought they were cherry picking. looked like certain of segna's hedge fund clients obviously they got a tip along those lines. they were getting benefits. others weren't. when was raj. whether they looked at trading went on the trading looked suspicious. ahead of deals. sort of the stuff in this indictment. they looked at raj's trading too. that is when they really, that's when they really started to bear down. that is what led to raj rajaratnam, fascinating that the brother who started the whole thing who got raj, bigger brother in trouble is now six years later now being --. ashley: he is not off the hook. >> not off the hook. pleading not guilty. his brother did as well. we'll see what ha hoops. ashley: great stuff, charlie gasparino. >> follow that line of reasoning. hopefully makes for a great book. tracy: will
he caught matthew martoma which may lead to steve cohen, sac former fund manager trading on alleged insider information on elon. expert period of time network guy giving him the information. he was looking at the capital whole another time before the financial crisis because he thought they were cherry picking. looked like certain of segna's hedge fund clients obviously they got a tip along those lines. they were getting benefits. others weren't. when was raj. whether they looked at trading...
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Mar 18, 2013
03/13
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this is important. >> steve rattner, why does this matter? cyprus. >> who cares about cyprus, right? >> actually, we should. >> cyprus hill. >> what does it matter? come on. tell me if somebody sneezes in cyprus we get a cold on the nasdaq? >> we're going to have a cold on the nasdaq because the nasdaq is going to go down today. two reasons why this matters. obviously not many people care about cyprus. first, this is an example of how the europeans have screwed up the bailout by trying to get the depositors to pay part of the cost. you now have a run on the bank. you could have a run on the banks in europe azure pees euroy why do i have my money in this bank? i could be next. it shows europe is still a mess. they have a whole bunch of problems. cyprus may be really tiny. it can affect behavior in other parts of the eurozone as we saw with greece. it's a case where the europeans are trying to punish a bunch of russian oligarchs who have deposits in cyprus bank and it backfired on them. >> so the markets. are the markets going to all go down be
this is important. >> steve rattner, why does this matter? cyprus. >> who cares about cyprus, right? >> actually, we should. >> cyprus hill. >> what does it matter? come on. tell me if somebody sneezes in cyprus we get a cold on the nasdaq? >> we're going to have a cold on the nasdaq because the nasdaq is going to go down today. two reasons why this matters. obviously not many people care about cyprus. first, this is an example of how the europeans have...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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it you in the biggest worry to me is the effect of this whole union of the think banking commit pep steve liesman was talking about it this morning and i think he's right. there will be people slowly moving deposits out of the higher risk countries and maybe into the u.s. and the uk, as well. here's what to look for. april 4th and that's the ecb meeting. watch what mario draghi has to say about that and that he'll make liquidity more available to banks. remember those ltros that they did about a year ago. don't be surprised that they dragged those things out again and everybody was talking about the weak top line growth. there is the company that has to be the envy for everybody looking for top line growth. their projected sales for 2014 and 10% to 12% increase and take out all of the new stores and same-store sales growth, 4% to 6% and those are really good numbers and that stock's up today sitting at a six-month high and i want to see a big welcome to people on the floor and we have ice traders on the floor and intercontinental exchange and they have 40 new traders in the blue room and
it you in the biggest worry to me is the effect of this whole union of the think banking commit pep steve liesman was talking about it this morning and i think he's right. there will be people slowly moving deposits out of the higher risk countries and maybe into the u.s. and the uk, as well. here's what to look for. april 4th and that's the ecb meeting. watch what mario draghi has to say about that and that he'll make liquidity more available to banks. remember those ltros that they did about...